The story of the Gold Hill News isn’t like quite any other newspaper in Nevada, and that’s why you owe it to yourself to hear David Toll tell it firsthand at his upcoming lecture at the Nevada State Museum. If you’ve worked long in journalism in Nevada, or read much …
Read More »Circulation managers to meet in Las Vegas
The annual conference of the Cal Western Circulation Managers Association is scheduled to begin June 20 at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas. The group has a full schedule of seminars planned over the course of the four-day conference. You can find out more and register here.
Read More »2017 convention coming to Carson City
The Nevada Press Association’s annual convention will be Sept. 29-30 in Carson City. Plan to join us on Friday, Sept. 29, for a reception at the historic Rinckel Mansion, home of the NPA (as well as offices of the capital bureaus of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Associated Press and Nevada …
Read More »Bills tracked in 2017 session
Below is a list of many of the bills and bill drafts that we were tracking at the Nevada Press Association during the 2017 session, which concluded June 5. We have two primary interests — open government (meetings, records and public notices) and the newspaper industry, when it may be …
Read More »Freedom of the press under fire
I left Joe Crowley Theater on Tuesday evening without much encouragement that freedom of the press, as we know it, is alive or well. The occasion was a talk by RonNell Andersen Jones and David Greene, moderated by Patrick File, on threats to the First Amendment. The title of the …
Read More »Open meeting law
Nevada’s open meeting law may be found in Chapter 241 of Nevada Revised Statutes. “In enacting this chapter,” the law says, “the Legislature finds and declares that all public bodies exist to aid in the conduct of the people’s business. It is the intent of the law that their actions …
Read More »ACLU’s open-records bill fails
Here’s a statement from the ACLU of Nevada last week on the death of its open-records bill. It did not get a vote before Friday’s deadline. The Nevada Press Association supported the bill and was working with the sponsors to try to make it work. The ACLU of Nevada was …
Read More »Public-notices bill dies on deadline
A bill sought by Nevada broadcasters, which would have enabled them to move public notices out of newspapers and onto their websites, died Friday without a vote in the Senate Government Affairs Committee. SB218 was sponsored by Sen. Aaron Ford, D-Las Vegas, who let the bill expire because it didn’t …
Read More »New Voices bill passes its first test
At the end of the day, Senate Bill 420, which is the Nevada version of New Voices legislation, was recommended for approval on Thursday by the Senate Committee on Education, the first step toward giving more protection to the rights of student journalists. The bill is sponsored by Sen. Nicole …
Read More »Put notices online? We already do that.
A bill in front of the Nevada Legislature would have a profound effect on public notices in the state, and I want to make clear what it would and wouldn’t do. Public notices are a crucial component of a three-pronged foundation that keeps government open and transparent, along with public …
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